Ralph Douglas Townsend was born in Nedlands, West Australia, on 13 December 1951.[1] He moved to England, where he held teaching appointments at Dover College and Abingdon School. He returned to study at Oxford University,[4] with a dissertation in 1981 on "Hagiography in England in the nineteenth century".[5] He was first Senior Scholar at Keble College, then a Junior Research Fellow, Tutor and Dean of Degrees at Lincoln College, where he was the Anglican chaplain. He resigned from this post in 1985 when he decided to join the Roman Catholic Church.[4]
Teacher
Townsend took up a teaching post at Eton College in 1985 which he left in 1989 to become Headmaster of Sydney Grammar School. While in Sydney, he was Patron of the Australian Musicians' Academy and President of the New South Wales Classical Association. After ten years in that post, he returned to England to become Headmaster of Oundle School.[6][7] In 2005, he was appointed Headmaster of Winchester College, the first Roman Catholic to hold that post since the English Reformation.[8] In 2011 he was invested a Knight of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem.[9]
"Education and Business Ethics" in Foundations No.6 November 1991
"Even a Good Education Gives Rise to Problems" in Proceedings of the Teachers' Guild of New South Wales 1991-1992, also in The Educational Forum Vol.58 No.1 1993
"The Sins of Success: the Authority to Change" in The Ethics of Teaching and Learning, IPA Education Policy Unit 1993 * "What's Going to Happen to the Tots?" in Independence (AHISA) Vol.19 No.1, 1994
"From Here to Downunder and Back Again" in The Isis Magazine 27 2000
"What We Do Well" in Conference & Common Room 2004
"The Cambridge Companion to J.H.Newman" in The Way, April 2010
^Townsend, Ralph Douglas (1981). Hagiography in England in the nineteenth century: a study in literary, historiographical and theological developments. University of Oxford (Dissertation).
^"Governors 2010 -2011"(PDF). mrc-academy.org. Midhurst Rother College. Archived from the original(PDF) on 4 September 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2011.